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latirjnal Mi-flaMB Itankfi).
VOL. XX. NO. 46.
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 31, I860.
WHOLE NO. 1,034.
Iiitioaol Jtiiti-SUiJcro Stonbntt.
KLY, ON SATURDAY,
,dt) preparatory
Bitted by bim
who got up
fro-^lab-trg.
UNGODLINESS."
INCREASE UNTO
ut thr " bitterness" of "the t
it, like Delilah's " bands of t<
; but.
t remained
John Brown, by
we lui.i evir l.elnii, im-.tjiinetl. We hud long been persuaded that the perpetual reprobation of Blavery in cer-
tain t[,i:iitii:; wsih mily tin exliil.i'irsiMii" vsiii, Imbiilii :m " ;
gendered by malice and selfishness, and per-
those under his
would be granted. They expected and hoped
ith theiranathemas upon Gov. Wise, and the whole
and the "peculiar institutions" of the Southern
y, that could see the kind feelings of such a bene-
name, Gov. Wise responded immediately to the
,parent wishes of tbe writer. Ilisi letter was ul
lurteoos, kind, and thoroughly manly and honorable,
commended lor its kindness, benevolence, and good
■e idea of going to Virginia, to take care of Old
i, than she is.nl ei' !;mnir tn the North [■<,!,;. to kx,!;
after the remains of Sir Johu Franklin. Instead of doing
feelings—holding out hopes of comfort
and solace to bim, wben he should see ber letter in the
only to bo disappointed. Tbe whole thing
iu tbe hope of making political capital, no
i throw the prison doors wide open to her
comes out with a column and a half of vitu-
P' I'riiie.i and abuse; evidently showing that she had been
" ' used as a cat's paw, and, cat-like, she now
ted rage, in spitting out harm-
ven the eulogist of Washington, and bis
patriotic and benevolent efforts, are spoken of as "the
irawling Binuosities of an Everett "—and the high-minded
.nd brilliant Chnate [ Webster | i;
severed in disu
genuously for pers
r political elicit ; 1
to a com p rebei
io us perseveraoee
erable preceptor c
others, scarcely knew
,nve ,!t
ie so 1 Here the effect ol
such vain babblings i:
Tne i.s-ocess seems i
ethiog like tl
litioo of erroneous opinions,
mately pain the asae
t of many minds, :
lie tbeir creed upon
main;;..!!, l
ment, tbey are incline
vi,.,-.- of error alone
ce it. Trot
Strong in tbe clear coi
self-distrusting and w
ak. When opposed
iTfauowcT
tasted
is ready to light; an
is appalled at the see
rder, rapine
as he was gradually a
his plana of a
servile
isur-
Did he'never think o
tin- <■■
sequences ?
Wi- !
In the.
thought of them as a
His wild, ra
which his mind and s
of tbia magnificent experir
Now, if one man thinks there is one road to that got
fully persuaded io his own mind, should there I
derness and sensitiveness about the discussion •
mid look as if there exists
) honesty of Tilleman, of Torquemada, of Pope Pius
d to suck honesty his admirers nre ubnndanlly welcome.
bis ' law,' or to 1
Wc pity the mine
lunatic asylum tb
And the men '
sent and heaven-c
testify to synagogues and pli
manufacture no apostle out i
isioned leader of God's hosts, what
to involve ourselves
tion. If there should
f the "vain babblings" uttered
0 u'ngodlinea
■esponsibh
.'oi
EVEIVS
EW WORK.
into the burning regions of the author's
satisfied ua that we eonld advanee unharmt
we did, and we have escaped to teli tbe tale o
deliverance. Technically aud progmaticallj
this book, of which tbe New York publishei
tion haa, doubtless, magnified its terrors,
fact, so cuttingly sarcastic as the tirades
Phillips, Esq., nor so bombastically wicked ai
Jreekish, and Hebra
■gistic, and drum-stick ecclesiastic, t
ledley of argument, invecti
I which, each and singula
iid demonstrate that a neg
e a chattel slave. In tbis
illusion (with Mr,
long words, and the hard words of the dictionary wber e
they belong, we are inclined to believe that he would fir.d
himself possessed of just such anti-slavery
held by fo -"'
Son them
e inclined t.
r-fifths of the Northern s
people. Perhaps he
i Paul, and send back $
iably h
! readily as they n
r l!:e U
sal repudiated, sprang into
millions. Jefferson, Washington, Wythe, Lee, t
[•nomas Jefferson conld not
speech. Where
. There h
deliberate, because n.
" magnificent hi
s and disgraceful epistle is, of c
"P0ThL"vePnom
stated
:ness the history of this government
failure np to this movement, He says
three distinct elements of compromise : Thi y
of the slave
menced a struggle between Slavery and Li
gentlemen, goveri
d the
blood; these
I, blood and cduct
for you the |
y°u tlle
PLEA FOR THE DISSOLUTION OF THE
■n\Z,i
dissolution of the I
WJs.il.
i Union.
.v,,-,;:y„.
■li.).. I.
* doubt of t
y speech is full of eulogies of the Union. Wben
perfectly well, he does not go about the Btreet aa]
ighbors to indorse bis solvency. They
If be hud asked The Nt
j, and Herald, a
knew he was sol'
to Calcutta it w
York Tribune, and Herald, and Ti
i publish t
lb
rrtical"addi
,ghaDl'doubt.
dJbisuCon-
stle Garden to resolve that the earth
.ed the laws of gravity, and that is
lerefore, much whether these enthu-
e what they would have us to under.
you knew she had I
under tbe control of i
of ad inert
n the right-bun
iter, and the sb
We stand just ti
ble conflict'-'—
thirty-three States—
an irrepressible
be good, aud go together ; and the o
Why should '
lirty-three States—by the verdict of the wisest sti
men, an irrepressible conflict. One man says they
: ■ ■'■■■ ■ .
ii (_uneenng.) "Science,"
lys Lord Bacon," lights her torch at every man's candle.
loughtful people, every man should be diiig
■ el bold to utter it. Tbat Is all we elaii
i-night, the whole of it. Which way shall :
2 settled ? If tin- .■ .■ other side, there
the public thought. You may say, from Paradise down
ight of the planet Jnpi
grassboppei
' generi
■ ■
,ed by opinion
of happy people, pi
words o
argument
speak
Union, except as i
rest iu the civil af
as they affect the
se... , . ..
i to-night
id besides,
rchants, reverend
.
to the A
however sacred.
a colored auditor, for the gratification
: suspect that tbis book is designed for Southern
ation ; aod if Mr. Phillips and Mr.
3 to the live men of the South, and work as faith ful
rteurs among their Southern brethren, on a fair
' to be paid by tho Boston Tract Society, who can
hat good they might do? But in this benign ted
where Dr. Cheever has so loudly complained of ita
i conscience, what can be expected from one lit tie
i have a word of regret. Dr. Cheever is, as all "who
him personally will say, one of the most omi.able,
, _ pure and noble pur
ni. t-iesiti L'nion stands betwi
B all that you would save—yom
iwledge, however,
than human
I, no machi
:.. ill.- ■' .. :■-
reach my pur-
pure and noble pi
loved. Aud yet be bas
litted to tbe m J1-
lence of temper,
ity of r
:ired to
s irit^and
himself. But.ala
thoughts pregnan
ie demon of abolitio
POLITICS 1
One of the most hearties
Ists, and
hope that what comes from the genth
Harrison, Seward
Republican allies (and
forth their " bloodthirsty benevolenc
DUfih 1
i newspapers)
1 Miss Lye ti
d in advai <
. Gov. Wise, of Virgin l
sing herself to be an Abolitionist, but asking t
permitted to go to the jail in Oharlestown, and nurse ar
comfort tbe prisoner John Brown, daring his confboenie -a
t even ho said " Liberty and Union,
eof 1860 says the Bepubli
of the 7th of March, 1850,
inion," puts.
Republican represent]
erty. Id
;, ladies and genth
■utes; father with no children,
h I dis-
i, robbed of their r
childre " '
herded in promiscuous conenbinag
em to read, an indictable offence
the slave system. Why does it
Go from the North pole to the S
o the spirit of the age—Brazil
i Eepubli
bas gotten rid of slaver
out, and as the Aboliti
What has
ent, there is liberty; here only
n no change in the elements which
vroog ? Show me the fallacy of
to the newly formed machinery of
am ; take that same speech of Mr.
•t because it is novel, bnt because
tterly, because you will allow it is
n dispute it is historically ac-
don't quite allow it; I don't agree ti
Massachusetts a
kee's hand than ii
blood. I think il
..rial prosperity. That blood ii
being. That blnod in Euglai
enough to separate her eastern fron
blood, with New England and
r the wealth
tbat the M
wish to, and not 1
pel them
■ .'.!:, .
bey arc the ri
these mate g
habits, blood s
of the fights,
ous. Now,
ade. They
wealth, thoughts, habits,
Gove
, Mr. Sewi
idea tbat their Uni.
sventy years. What is
the slave side. He tell
t, tbe people have
defeat
. ■ ..
that he gives for this i
propensity of the Capitol States—an
the Union. What is his remedy t "
a better." How due; i* ci ■
the Union. The cauldron hi,.- I,■■■ -iitiv.:.-.
wholesome p
nfused ? None.
s what is called s
) of tbe Unio
Add I
w, the traveller n
" Have yousuccei
n engaged for forty y
.cumbers (laughter).
" Not yet; butonlj
I Wyths, the s;
brooded over
the ship of Sta
clutched Florida
We bought Loi
ogei wings. Sam Adat
e. We went on seventy_
from Spain, and doomed i
We trampled on
; pi.
nnsider whether we b
le must not have a p
Veil, now, fellow-citi
Villiam H. Seward. He
the Uoi
with the Fugitive
itution itself in th.
ian, the boldest lhat i
"X'™t'rh
Why, they would undout
t (ereat
What
' ...IKj;;,
:■-:: I.
ti. ;, ..: smoke at Rochester
)hio, his full bel
l evil, and must
■:..,.-■ ei
incian. Hasp
ed in 1858, in ■
y is a sin and a
lisbed i and you and I
got a Constitution nnder which the
Ives A boi it ion i sta—Jeffe
I, I know he did, and that n
leading
ton, Patrick Henry, Wythe, Lee,
years on your sacr
; leading
enduring granit
Tbey drifted sixty
i makes his bid for the Presidency se
id that he ought to c<
it turn round and lool
,lic opinion whi
unceu ; mat manes such a condi
Am I wrong iu saying that it is a pro-slav.-.
thing a new member of Congresi
the floor, is, " Mr. Speaker, 1 an
(laughter and applause). _Now, let
t the other side.
rect-every l"
ment of three millions of
governed. That is the Coastituti
and you may gi
has it done? J
you do, of sixty
pie bow they should
-i. Our fathers mai
;). Well, now, wb
well as you. I kuc
sixty years. Let
object of governmen
nly have :
in ....'ilii to (it-
object, fellow-sitizens, in c
endeavor to add an atom,
f country, public opinion. You may
I of granite, and grout it with iron, and
girl's heart will wear it down, only give
mlses, to hasten them. Tbat
is the object of governi
perty, and to eeenre to
e of all he thinks. Is not that the
3 my only object
3 tion of a government ? Save j
erty, give expansion to your n'
s the Union done f(
'
e your lives
•eigns
ting tbe laboring classes
channel of tbe last century is w
popular progress and elevation
despot bends from his throne
Europe, for tbe h
ins, melting fi''
civil i\.-l, ■'.
, ,:'.'■ :,-,'■ - iiieltiiis- IV-Ui :r.. e.
t relieved the people, that has not gone stride after
r with revolution in favor of the people. In 177C
the text for this progress of the race on both side;
ocean. We commenced it; our trumpet-notes
mt to the enslaved millions the hope and the pro
any better because South Carolina buys negroes i
perty there is all tbe same. The right of locon
can you and 1 go to Savannah to-night V Supp
.: as a mere
Ward Beecher'.. think if you had
your life insured, the efflce wonld think you had fc '"-'
tbe policy (applause aud laughter). There is no r
the utterance of opinions : suppose you stood in Charleston to-night. How long Bhould I be permitted t(
this speech ? How long would you be permitted t
toit? Well, ih-. there,then.
off property, Btrike off life, strike off freedom of opinion.
Come borne again: Does the existence of tbe Union
make the utterance of opinion any safer in New York?
When 1 was mobbed ten years ago in the
nacle, do you suppose it was New York that r
ident of the United
ynders. He could
When Dr. Dewey,
we had placed down the
and the whole world began ti
States that stirred the »
i the Northern S
e Union e:
r day a boy ii
•ause South Carolin;
.ny other body's I
3 tbe energy and i
i anchorage, c
i harbors,
11 sav that
"ew Yoi
the W.
t:ippi vaiieyn
Who shall
ewl
tbe Western
i steel, New York and New E
i and lightning to their car
with their commerce, ond dr;
vorld into tbeir harbors (appls
yield the point. 1 will -irn
uerce is tbe child of the. Uni
You have sacrificed the i
d the purity of your church.
; you have got the dollar ; yc
■ill compare the
" " i Wash! '
: liopk
. What ha«
■"■'■:■ ■ . ■ ■
id the Edwi
have got
Let her flag float over tbe milli
ns of prosperity, but literature dro
; change which the Union has
■, ■ j s ,
:emansmp irans in thedur'
', you ask me, What do y.
iports slavery, ond in those reas
the reason why I wish to get rid
t place, it degrades public opinioi
tbe Northern statesman, is oblig
I said just now that Mr. Sewarc
He suggests nothing. He only says, There
I will find o
o ground, r
I ■ ::■: .'...
New York
as I am making to-night. It came from polii
I Abolitionists who said—what Mr. H.'wi.fl ca
on the floor of tbe Senate—we met
d strangle it (applause). Out of thi
as noweo. puouc opinion and agitation, which have pr
uced the ouly reliable, the only hopeful, the only posaib
lement that can ever achieve tbe safety of the Unic
om becoming a slavocracy and a despotism. There
ich an opinion created by men who have lived, labon
nd cemented tbe Union. Juhn Quincy Adams said
I III want I
I Webster
I
eUni
■ I
.re»0wlaus
i affords at Ie
n, outside of Repul
isible hope that you cannoi g
ol the Union. 1
io hostility to the Union. .
i as to attempt to prophesy tl
the first place, it is two thousand millions of dollars i
vested in one kind of property. You know the power
money. Tbis is the age of money—the age of the supi
macy of money. Two thousand millions oi ik.iiarj in
nation aptly described as loving a guinea so much th
they would leap over the opening of hell to get at i
by whom f Not a million of the people, but a conci
i^ tbe spirit of the age; against whi
teenth century a
the e
' '
pital. Then the i
He had behind
' the United
Then
/ tbe Union writhed
long time, tbe scales hung dou
... ..-.:.-
opularity of Andrew Jackson and the Denu.
i the full fiusb of success. To-day, we have g ' '
s of dollars, producing a thousand
lunds of ci
Rothschild, which says t
Connecticut. They_
quent speeches, and
» of the Uni
a great deal o
five hundred
tdea!. Four
th Carolina, like Governor Aiken, will ride leisurely
vo-thirds of the towns of Massi
call that a Republic. That is
Hapsburg. And what is tbe third strand
The hatred of
a right to help the sh
te helping
and one of tbe audience called out," Oh, ii
but he helped niggers I" The argument didn't
Now, tbat is the third strand. I will accept tbe
stood the other day in Coo pi
Kosciusko;
luaand millions of dollars, and tbe aristocracy
For there is, rightfully
t, such a hatred of wealth a
* both. Put (
The C
i -.-,.. ;l ;.
and there
has got justice i
u know the power
lailroad ia the State of New Yor .
Amboy is the State of New Jersey.
" ' ts off from Old
ideas—universal
England,
Two centuries ago New
England with cei'
suffrage, free cbu:
with the same ideas, and with aristocratis:
chains, and she is about a hnndred years behind. Tbat
ig the way ideas right institutions. Now, this public opinion will take a century or two—by all past experience
it will take about a century to abolish slavery
" government beld by the Slave Power. As
ts grow ; they are not made. Just
of New York, with all her banks, fa
eading men, nnited in a partnership against
i end. I have seen tbe palace of the Ctess
ones, half as large as this room, trroutcd tc
by iron. But the tiny weeds
,d got in between them, and tc
ns. Your government will go t
ent of a people in the same way, but it will
'■■■:•
foments on your side
ither tho va
dr. Seward
ne of tw,
be broken
np the Union and get the
' ays, if you plant an oal
things must happen
tliood
inde
idered
way of protecting a clas- it> by letting their forces
ict themselves. Now, South Carolina puts ber heel
pulation. What ia God's will?
?e up and fight
ause we stand
Underwood of Kentucky
God's
t themselves.
popnh
by don't they? Becauaewe stand here,
ivent it. Mr. Underw
[ the Norih," We owe lo you a permanent safeguard,
it for you we have two millions of slaves ready to riae
the first tap of the drum." I think tht
of tbe New Testament,
snfident frankness, am
ticket? I honored 1
loke the truth; I d<
ons that seems to rer
ave tremendous powi
the will of the Slave Powi
r the left. As a descendant of the I
'
:i the [
Wek
■
;■ il themselves t(
' ' " e system be s
p tbe black r
i they agreed that tbe fugitive slave
stands the New
of Manchester and Lauci
il. If I could t
New York, sbe would 1
would not be trampled ; pulpi
n the one side Kentuckj
t a child
i the o
ght a
ol Oh;
she would
million*
speech is i
Vu'.i i,i.|-i.
Ily keeps Kentucky
t the impassable gulf
.as the oath of 01
every sh
bauble than that for whicb his
inia (great applause).
only a deserved compliment for us to
id, he intended to commit perjury
am not exaggeratiog; if I had
your presence tbat the
fiiit.il hy
keep their
suie ano not tneir principles; you would see an
A.nei-i ii ■ i Hu same s.pot that the Eng-
,an does iu independence. I know the weight that
Orleans and Havana bave even on Liverpool. Now,
e count up what I would gain by the t - '-'-
of the Union. South Carolina would look ii
whnt Mexi
would look into tbe eye o
bread ofthe laborer, 1 1 . re
Seward regards the sit
io hang upon bi
ore gorgeo, '
bid would
i fugitive si
ud it—and yet what
does all freedom
Again, Kentucky
perty worth
"'" 'ake leg
ould look to New York ;
Observer (laughter)
B Of ti
oblig
■ I his, life, by ihe testimony of h
o support—tbat very Constitute
sold? It
-■"■■'■ "■'.:
the Uni
like to add-
an without jeoparding my self-respect, without
an oath which you know I would not and ou
keep, und I will vote for William H. Seward
t President (laughter'), aod I will tell you why. If
re is a P "
tbe Administration—you
ry thing
or a Democrat be elected, and
Power; and Insurr
ctcd in 1800, you will be looking
berty, fettered, can do agai
ion will be lulled; everj '
e. Let Di
imself for a struggle wi
thought in the pulpits,
.rogramme os that of Se
Statts..
I
G ni li.vei'l u lhat justice should be expe-
, ana wicuedness should be bankrupt. He fix-1
when He settled the laws of His Kingdom. Thei
first J*" a m
only aay, Take off your
he vigor of thai
urging him to rise
leave them, the A:
manhood. But in addition/there is the pecuniary
ih century. We,uu ui usuwe
;-f!il.T
We oil
New Yor"
No'
i couseque
luxury of i
■ ..'. ill.. :
it, they hav
: ..
Carolina has one-balf idle,
iputsion,
rorking
.ten, they should go bi
.rating from the
ion (hug'
They bave got
Why, a
ia does not cost half as much pei
to-day; the other threu-q:iarl,rsi
the Irishman said, they lay up a loss (laughter)
Child
South Carolina'.- ,-). But,suppose
at they went out. They bave got to support a govern-
ident, generals, police, navy, army—the
Now, that lab(
intelligent. If it
nd of cotton to :
To-day the disput
Educate the slave
alave? You migbi
the top, and rid»
what they say they i
them to-day from their
it do it before she c
e patriotisi
George V
tl.ii ....::,,
lade that
i's, they would say : Children, for
applause)
describing Washington,
John Brown of Harp
(applause and hisses). You
per's Ferry w
.1 rebel"? Well
int to separate you from New Orleans i
it where Liverpool stands in relation ti
Seward would (.
Carolina than he does for Palmerston ;''.
nkl think as little of Toon-
does of The London Times. We sho
the same ; we should have the same
language, the same literature, steaml
but, comparatively, iodependence in tl
■:■. I.y,
■ New Orleun
Ns .,
To-dii)
Only ii
lage in J>
dage to the li
.
i help slavery ? Let r
it to a passenger,
come back, boy;
(Applause, long continued.) Ia that in consequence of
It burns. That is God's
,ge back to Plymou
(- —'
ilpit has rendered,
mean to use them (applause).
least tbe truth; it is t
tbey shall have it. Now, if you enter the \
t unbroken line of clergymen
us, White man, free man,g
rat the pulpit i
» you, along t
a melancholy ti
ilroads of Com
If the
the rich
i eyes and
',■ \Zi
n «!' t
vitable thai
?alth to-dai
;an be altered.
■
ii':.; -...-.,
, the
the Slave Power
t. tne second va?
v York. That Ji
political bands that hold
" vould not be filled b;
i would not be able t
. firms tbat
' .. ,..!
■eaking up
he choiees b
spublics said, and they freed him.
the eve i. ___
' "' " How
Gospel ?
t them o
. ■
say, There is Ohio—whi
. ..._f HZ"
II take legi
'Hoc
Dr. Spng
Hid thin
r nothing. No, indeed I
: ■. ■"■
ing Ryn-
Dr. Dewey, nnd The New
i would see very different
-Ily and cata
f the selfish-
compressed into an h
iy is, that np to the
enot! It ci
be a valuable n
I'tdeny it. All
.ointit has secured
ys that the great
Certainly. Daniel
the Colonies was that they pro-
Carlyle s
All I
•seness, tl
ced Washington. The fault of the Uni.
tinned), Well, it is a Bad record. God gave us the
tluit he lent this generation. From his
New Hampshire mother he took os much vigor of will
useful s
i the New England atmospbi
t Si'.,,.
nof t
on;." r l! an
bat mark thi _
of good reputations, the s'kelelons of
regret the Ui
'fi:. I ...
broadest and
h to swallow
tbe pathway ofthe Union, lhe wreck
the saddest n
if hia
here. What hope have
struggle of public opii
Slowly, by the preachin
mething nn
say, for
.[i...'-,.-ehe'. Il doi
obliged by t
ance,that Jo!
Lay lhat reco
Washington in front of t
. i to you? Nei
sach man shall make up his
ily. That is ju:
litution, God gt
t of tbem.
iy pocket," Tbe
i them up, and f
e Clurt
i Ida
freedom by fly
of the land of t
!„,.' i- tl,.
you are willin
,t government, whose ci
1 he had vindicated
broken by emotion, th
Puritan Common weal t
not vindicate its righ
era thought they w
11 allow me to close mine
respect liberty, to claim fi
wever swelling bribe tbf
: -In : :. \
t will be to impress upon
■cjust
sacredness ol
,nity holds to every man tbe oath that
whom our fathers forgot, a^
their physical force, 60 years of bondage tl
law, Constitution or no Constitt
we will break those fetters, and elevate that race to ar
(quality with ourselves ; and may God help you to keef
: whom they pledged
i loss, law or no
li (loud applause).
CULMINATION OF THE SENATORIAL
DESPOTISM.
■■.■': I ..
themselves tb
lei.';' Sla -.
e of a body b
irresponsible will I The S
escept that o:
ligation with the powers of an iiifj.iir-iiio.i, a,
acter and authority of a Judicial Uuurt. 11
this they then assume tbe denial of ihe right
answer before it, as being a contempt of the
guilty of tbat crime of contempt,
accusers, the jurors, and the judges*
Hyatt t
mn, themselves tl
the form of callii
Und
ad or proved—under this dread and ai
isation as for crime, of contempt again
e authority the individual so accused o
' s merely a

latirjnal Mi-flaMB Itankfi).
VOL. XX. NO. 46.
NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 31, I860.
WHOLE NO. 1,034.
Iiitioaol Jtiiti-SUiJcro Stonbntt.
KLY, ON SATURDAY,
,dt) preparatory
Bitted by bim
who got up
fro-^lab-trg.
UNGODLINESS."
INCREASE UNTO
ut thr " bitterness" of "the t
it, like Delilah's " bands of t<
; but.
t remained
John Brown, by
we lui.i evir l.elnii, im-.tjiinetl. We hud long been persuaded that the perpetual reprobation of Blavery in cer-
tain t[,i:iitii:; wsih mily tin exliil.i'irsiMii" vsiii, Imbiilii :m " ;
gendered by malice and selfishness, and per-
those under his
would be granted. They expected and hoped
ith theiranathemas upon Gov. Wise, and the whole
and the "peculiar institutions" of the Southern
y, that could see the kind feelings of such a bene-
name, Gov. Wise responded immediately to the
,parent wishes of tbe writer. Ilisi letter was ul
lurteoos, kind, and thoroughly manly and honorable,
commended lor its kindness, benevolence, and good
■e idea of going to Virginia, to take care of Old
i, than she is.nl ei' !;mnir tn the North [■ by letting their forces
ict themselves. Now, South Carolina puts ber heel
pulation. What ia God's will?
?e up and fight
ause we stand
Underwood of Kentucky
God's
t themselves.
popnh
by don't they? Becauaewe stand here,
ivent it. Mr. Underw
[ the Norih," We owe lo you a permanent safeguard,
it for you we have two millions of slaves ready to riae
the first tap of the drum." I think tht
of tbe New Testament,
snfident frankness, am
ticket? I honored 1
loke the truth; I d<
ons that seems to rer
ave tremendous powi
the will of the Slave Powi
r the left. As a descendant of the I
'
:i the [
Wek
■
;■ il themselves t(
' ' " e system be s
p tbe black r
i they agreed that tbe fugitive slave
stands the New
of Manchester and Lauci
il. If I could t
New York, sbe would 1
would not be trampled ; pulpi
n the one side Kentuckj
t a child
i the o
ght a
ol Oh;
she would
million*
speech is i
Vu'.i i,i.|-i.
Ily keeps Kentucky
t the impassable gulf
.as the oath of 01
every sh
bauble than that for whicb his
inia (great applause).
only a deserved compliment for us to
id, he intended to commit perjury
am not exaggeratiog; if I had
your presence tbat the
fiiit.il hy
keep their
suie ano not tneir principles; you would see an
A.nei-i ii ■ i Hu same s.pot that the Eng-
,an does iu independence. I know the weight that
Orleans and Havana bave even on Liverpool. Now,
e count up what I would gain by the t - '-'-
of the Union. South Carolina would look ii
whnt Mexi
would look into tbe eye o
bread ofthe laborer, 1 1 . re
Seward regards the sit
io hang upon bi
ore gorgeo, '
bid would
i fugitive si
ud it—and yet what
does all freedom
Again, Kentucky
perty worth
"'" 'ake leg
ould look to New York ;
Observer (laughter)
B Of ti
oblig
■ I his, life, by ihe testimony of h
o support—tbat very Constitute
sold? It
-■"■■'■ "■'.:
the Uni
like to add-
an without jeoparding my self-respect, without
an oath which you know I would not and ou
keep, und I will vote for William H. Seward
t President (laughter'), aod I will tell you why. If
re is a P "
tbe Administration—you
ry thing
or a Democrat be elected, and
Power; and Insurr
ctcd in 1800, you will be looking
berty, fettered, can do agai
ion will be lulled; everj '
e. Let Di
imself for a struggle wi
thought in the pulpits,
.rogramme os that of Se
Statts..
I
G ni li.vei'l u lhat justice should be expe-
, ana wicuedness should be bankrupt. He fix-1
when He settled the laws of His Kingdom. Thei
first J*" a m
only aay, Take off your
he vigor of thai
urging him to rise
leave them, the A:
manhood. But in addition/there is the pecuniary
ih century. We,uu ui usuwe
;-f!il.T
We oil
New Yor"
No'
i couseque
luxury of i
■ ..'. ill.. :
it, they hav
: ..
Carolina has one-balf idle,
iputsion,
rorking
.ten, they should go bi
.rating from the
ion (hug'
They bave got
Why, a
ia does not cost half as much pei
to-day; the other threu-q:iarl,rsi
the Irishman said, they lay up a loss (laughter)
Child
South Carolina'.- ,-). But,suppose
at they went out. They bave got to support a govern-
ident, generals, police, navy, army—the
Now, that lab(
intelligent. If it
nd of cotton to :
To-day the disput
Educate the slave
alave? You migbi
the top, and rid»
what they say they i
them to-day from their
it do it before she c
e patriotisi
George V
tl.ii ....::,,
lade that
i's, they would say : Children, for
applause)
describing Washington,
John Brown of Harp
(applause and hisses). You
per's Ferry w
.1 rebel"? Well
int to separate you from New Orleans i
it where Liverpool stands in relation ti
Seward would (.
Carolina than he does for Palmerston ;''.
nkl think as little of Toon-
does of The London Times. We sho
the same ; we should have the same
language, the same literature, steaml
but, comparatively, iodependence in tl
■:■. I.y,
■ New Orleun
Ns .,
To-dii)
Only ii
lage in J>
dage to the li
.
i help slavery ? Let r
it to a passenger,
come back, boy;
(Applause, long continued.) Ia that in consequence of
It burns. That is God's
,ge back to Plymou
(- —'
ilpit has rendered,
mean to use them (applause).
least tbe truth; it is t
tbey shall have it. Now, if you enter the \
t unbroken line of clergymen
us, White man, free man,g
rat the pulpit i
» you, along t
a melancholy ti
ilroads of Com
If the
the rich
i eyes and
',■ \Zi
n «!' t
vitable thai
?alth to-dai
;an be altered.
■
ii':.; -...-.,
, the
the Slave Power
t. tne second va?
v York. That Ji
political bands that hold
" vould not be filled b;
i would not be able t
. firms tbat
' .. ,..!
■eaking up
he choiees b
spublics said, and they freed him.
the eve i. ___
' "' " How
Gospel ?
t them o
. ■
say, There is Ohio—whi
. ..._f HZ"
II take legi
'Hoc
Dr. Spng
Hid thin
r nothing. No, indeed I
: ■. ■"■
ing Ryn-
Dr. Dewey, nnd The New
i would see very different
-Ily and cata
f the selfish-
compressed into an h
iy is, that np to the
enot! It ci
be a valuable n
I'tdeny it. All
.ointit has secured
ys that the great
Certainly. Daniel
the Colonies was that they pro-
Carlyle s
All I
•seness, tl
ced Washington. The fault of the Uni.
tinned), Well, it is a Bad record. God gave us the
tluit he lent this generation. From his
New Hampshire mother he took os much vigor of will
useful s
i the New England atmospbi
t Si'.,,.
nof t
on;." r l! an
bat mark thi _
of good reputations, the s'kelelons of
regret the Ui
'fi:. I ...
broadest and
h to swallow
tbe pathway ofthe Union, lhe wreck
the saddest n
if hia
here. What hope have
struggle of public opii
Slowly, by the preachin
mething nn
say, for
.[i...'-,.-ehe'. Il doi
obliged by t
ance,that Jo!
Lay lhat reco
Washington in front of t
. i to you? Nei
sach man shall make up his
ily. That is ju:
litution, God gt
t of tbem.
iy pocket," Tbe
i them up, and f
e Clurt
i Ida
freedom by fly
of the land of t
!„,.' i- tl,.
you are willin
,t government, whose ci
1 he had vindicated
broken by emotion, th
Puritan Common weal t
not vindicate its righ
era thought they w
11 allow me to close mine
respect liberty, to claim fi
wever swelling bribe tbf
: -In : :. \
t will be to impress upon
■cjust
sacredness ol
,nity holds to every man tbe oath that
whom our fathers forgot, a^
their physical force, 60 years of bondage tl
law, Constitution or no Constitt
we will break those fetters, and elevate that race to ar
(quality with ourselves ; and may God help you to keef
: whom they pledged
i loss, law or no
li (loud applause).
CULMINATION OF THE SENATORIAL
DESPOTISM.
■■.■': I ..
themselves tb
lei.';' Sla -.
e of a body b
irresponsible will I The S
escept that o:
ligation with the powers of an iiifj.iir-iiio.i, a,
acter and authority of a Judicial Uuurt. 11
this they then assume tbe denial of ihe right
answer before it, as being a contempt of the
guilty of tbat crime of contempt,
accusers, the jurors, and the judges*
Hyatt t
mn, themselves tl
the form of callii
Und
ad or proved—under this dread and ai
isation as for crime, of contempt again
e authority the individual so accused o
' s merely a